Wentworth family

Wentworth
Place of originEngland
MottoEn Dieu est tout
(French for 'In God is all')

The members of the Wentworth family of both the U.S. and Australia, as listed below, are descended from Thomas Wentworth[clarification needed] and Jane, the daughter of Sir Oliver Mirfield. Sir Oliver died about 1522. The American Wentworths of New Hampshire are descended from Thomas' son Oliver.[1][2] The Wentworth branch of Virginia and Maryland, and the Australian Wentworths, are descended from another son Roger.[3][4] The Wentworth family, along with the Arden family, the Berkeley family, the Swinton family, and the Grindlay family, is descended in the male line from pre-Norman Conquest Anglo-Saxon roots.[5][6][7][8]

United States

The Wentworth family was a prominent American political family, mostly based in the British colonies and later U.S. states of New Hampshire, Maryland, and the Commonwealth of Virginia. Prominent members of the family include:

  • William Wentworth (1616–1697), patriarch of the New Hampshire branch of the family, and one of the early settlers of New Hampshire
  • Thomas Wentworth, Gentleman (1625–1672), Born into a cadet branch of the ancient Wentworth family, emigrated to Maryland and patented Wentworth-Woodhouse Plantation, named after the Wentworth family seat Wentworth-Woodhouse in Yorkshire.
  • John Wentworth (1671–1731), grandson of William Wentworth, and Lieutenant Governor of the Province of New Hampshire. As the Governor of New Hampshire at the time was simultaneously Governor of the Province of Massachusetts, the Lieutenant Governors of New Hampshire served with considerable power over the colony.
  • Benning Wentworth (1696–1770), first independent colonial Governor of New Hampshire who was not also Governor of Massachusetts
  • John Wentworth (1719–1781), a grandson of Lieutenant Governor John Wentworth, and cousin to the colonial governor of the same name, the 1st Baronet Wentworth. He was a judge, a colonel in the colonial militia, and sided with the revolutionary cause against his cousin.
  • Sir John Wentworth, 1st Baronet (1737–1820), a grandson of Lieutenant Governor John Wentworth through his son Mark, nephew of Benning Wentworth, and loyalist colonial Governor of New Hampshire during the American Revolution.
  • John Wentworth Jr. (1745–1787), son of Judge John Wentworth, and New Hampshire representative to the Continental Congress. Like his father, he was a revolutionary sympathizer and member of the New Hampshire Committee of Safety.
  • Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton (1759–1846), poet
  • Stephen G. Wentworth (1811–1897), descendant of William Wentworth and founder of the Wentworth Military Academy and College in Missouri.
  • Erastus Wentworth (1813–1886), a Christian missionary to China
  • John Wentworth (1815–1888), born in New Hampshire, but migrated to Chicago where he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois and also Mayor of Chicago
  • Moses J. Wentworth, nephew of Mayor John Wentworth of Chicago, and his protégé. He would himself serve in the Illinois House of Representatives

Australia

References

  1. ^ THE WENTWORTH GENEALOGY: ENGLISH AND AMERICAN, By JOHN WENTWORTH LL.D., of CHICAGO, Ill. IN THREE VOLUMES: LITTLE BROWN AND COMPANY,1878: VOLUME I, p.XVI, Wentworth, John (1878), Retrieved 17 March 2017
  2. ^ Cutter, William Richard Genealogical and Personal Memoirs: Relating to the Families of Boston and Massachusetts By William Richard Cutter prepared under the Historical supervision of William Richard Cutter, A.M. reprinted for Clearfield Company 1908: p.492-496 Retrieved 20 March 2017
  3. ^ A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry 2 vols: John Bernard Burke and Ashworth P. Burke: 1891: Wentworth of Vaucluse, pp.95-97 Retrieved 17 March 2017
  4. ^ A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry 2 vols: John Bernard Burke and Ashworth P. Burke: 1891: Wentworth of Vaucluse, pp.95-97 Retrieved 7 September 2018
  5. ^ Cutter, William Richard Genealogical and Personal Memoirs: Relating to the Families of Boston and Massachusetts By William Richard Cutter prepared under the Historical supervision of William Richard Cutter, A.M. reprinted for Clearfield Company 1908: p.492-496 Retrieved 25 June 2017
  6. ^ Burke, Sir Bernard. A Genealogical & Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, 18th Edition, Volume 1
  7. ^ Greenlee, Ralph Stebbins (1908). Genealogy of the Greenlee Families in America, Scotland, Ireland and England. Privately Printed.
  8. ^ Sir Bernard Burke: A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry: Vol.I: Wentworth of Vaucluse: pp.95-97
  9. ^ Ritchie, John (1997). The Wentworths: Father and Son. The Miegunyah Press at Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84751-X pp 2-3. Ritchie says South Elmsall; it should be North Elmsall.

Internal and external links

  • Wentworth (surname)
  • Wentworth (disambiguation)
  • Wentworth World Wide: Facebook group
  • Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies by John Burke and John Bernard Burke: London Scott Webster and Geary 1838: Wentworth, of North Elmsal, p.559
  • WENTWORTH3 Tudor Court: Tudor England Peerage: Elizabethan Peerage: Wentworth of Nettlestead: Thomas Wentworth. (This website may not be strictly authorative, but it is consistent with the references, and by using the links, you can go backward or forward in time.)
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